She is among a group of anthropologists who pioneered the use of
magnetic resonance imaging to study the skulls of ancient humans.

Dean Falk

Hale G. Smith Professor
Anthropology

Dr. Dean Falk, Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of Anthropology, specializes
in the evolution of the brain and cognition in higher primates. She
holds a doctorate in physical anthropology from the University of
Michigan.

In the course of human evolution, no development may be as important
as language. The ability to manipulate puffs of air into sounds
that others recognize as symbols of complex ideas helped humans to
band together and force a collective will on the environment.

"How did that happen? How and why did we learn to speak? I've
spent most of my career trying to answer those questions," said
Dean Falk, the Hale G. Smith Professor in FSU's department of anthropology.

An undergraduate anthropology course more than 30 years ago triggered
a curiosity in Falk that has made her one of the world's leading
experts on brain evolution. She is among a group of anthropologists
who pioneered the use of magnetic resonance imaging to study the
skulls of ancient humans. Falk's work applying medical
imaging technology to the study of fossil skulls with European scientists
(known for their research on a 5,000-year-old, so-called "Ice
Man of the Alps" found in a melting glacier in 1991) resulted
in the Austrian government awarding her the Austrian Cross of Honor
for Science and Art, 1st Class (the country's highest honor for scientists).

Falk tries to correlate brain size with major developments in human
evolution, such as the capability of walking on two legs. How large
was the brain when our ancestors became completely bipedal? Or when
man-made tools first appeared in the fossil record?

Scientists who have closely studied ancient tools say they show
that the makers had a marked preference for using their right hands,
a trait that showed up about two million years ago.

"Our brains are about three times the size of what it was back then," said
Falk. "And this handiness really separates us from other hominids.
Take the chimpanzee, our closest relative. It uses whichever hand
is convenient. A chimp has no preference."

Falk spent two weeks searching an Ethiopian desert
for the remains of human ancestors. Fossils in the area date back
4 million years and the international team of which Falk is a member
recovered the teeth of five individuals.

"It's really an exciting project," said Falk. "I
know there's an intact specimen out there waiting to tell us a story
of how we became human."